I believe I had that on "Off" some time ago when I actually had Vsync Off, but then I really noticed the screen tearing, but now it feels much smoother. I also switched the Low Latency Mode from "Ultra" to "On" instead. After that it seems really smooth and well. I didn't realize before that the "Adaptive" Vsync Mode literally limited your FPS to your monitor's refreshrate, thought it only reduced overall FPS to make gameplay as smooth as possible (Obviously that's what it does), but I never knew why it would lock at a lower FPS for me.Īfter turning Vsync completely off, I noticed that my CS:GO FPS went from the locked 240FPS all the way up to 600-1000 FPS, so I added a command in my Autoexec CFG for CS:GO which limited the FPS to maximum 400. RAM: Corsair Vengeance LPX 2x8GB DDR4 3200MHzĬase: Corsair Crystal 460X RGB ATX Midi Tower CaseĪlright I think I figured it out. My latest PC Reset was only 2-3 weeks ago where I factory resetted my entire PC.ĬPU: Intel Core i9 9900K (OC'd to 5.0GHZ)ĬPU Cooler: NZXT Kraken X53 Liquid CPU Cooler I'm using Empty Standby List, CPU Priority, Process Lasso, Malwarebytes Premium. In terms of what I've on my PC to boost the overall FPS, I've checked out several guides to get as much FPS possible and as little cache and loads in the background. However, I'm not an expert within PC Components, which is why I'm asking you guys for the answers. I managed to OC my CPU to 5.0GHz while also boosting my RAM, but it seemed in vain as my FPS barely increased.ĬS:GO is one of the frotier First Person Shooter games in Esports, and having it's optimal FPS is everything when playing at the highest level.Īt the time I'm writing this thread, I've upgraded my CPU from Core i7 9700K (OC) > I9 9900K (OC), I've replaced my old 3.5" HDD's with newer ones, Bought another 500GB M.2 SSD to use for my Windows and primary games such as CSGO, so the only thing that remains from my old PC Build (Old PC from 2013) is my PSU, which I sincerely feel is the least I would expect to slow my PC down. I started tinkering with the OC, having studied the BIOS and watching a few guides. To my surprise, CS:GO ran at 200-250 FPS, which truly shocked me. But at the same time, having this much FPS in a Computer Game is not something you would need for other games such as LoL, Rocket League, CoD, etc. I thought at first this would be plenty to get me 300-400 average FPS for CS:GO, as it not a demanding game. When I first built the PC, my GPU was a GTX 970, a i7 9700K CPU, 16GB of 3200MHz RAM, and a 250GB 2.5" SSD. The PC System which I built 2 years ago have been upgraded numerous times in order to boost my overall graphic experience. For a while now I've wondered why I'm not getting my desired FPS when playing my favourite game, CS:GO.
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